The Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship
The Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship is a year-long learning adventure for experienced NYC-area high school social studies teachers to help you re-ignite your passion for history, reinvigorate your love for teaching, and connect with a community of similarly motivated colleagues. Through a summer seminar, several intersessions and supportive coaching throughout the year, you will learn how to build rigor, equity - and joy! - into every history lesson.
“The Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship has been one of the greatest learning experiences of my teaching career. That is not hyperbole. This has been the first time I have gotten solid skills and content to grow my practice and engage my students intellectually. I have never felt more taken care of, heard and more at ease than at this program. You helped build better teachers and a great community. Thank you.”
Attend a Virtual Info Session!
Attend one of our live Zoom information sessions, held in January and February 2024!
Reignite Your Passion for History and Learning
Engage with renowned historians
Learn important, equity-centered content on this year’s theme: Long Reconstruction: The African-American Experience 1865-1965
Enjoy field excursions to New York City museums and cultural organizations
“The guest speakers were absolutely phenomenal!”
Reinvigorate Your Love for Teaching
Build rigor to build equity
Innovative and engaging pedagogy in close reading, discourse, and historical thinking
Resources, documents, lesson ideas and more
“So far this has been one of the best professional developments that I've attended. I have improved my craft more in the past few months than I have in my 10 previous years combined.”
Connect Together
Join a diverse community of great social studies teachers who will become cherished colleagues in the work.
Be treated like the professional you are
Feel seen, heard and valued!
“This program provided me with a community of like-minded individuals who help me feel seen and supported–a community of thought partners who are always willing to share resources and wisdom. I couldn't have asked for a better experience to reinvigorate my passion for teaching and history”
Who attends the Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship?
The program is open to:
High school social studies teachers
With 3+ years of experience (Even teachers with 20+ years have loved it!)
Who live in the New York City area. Participants will be expected to attend programming at the Relay office at 25 Broadway in Manhattan and be available for visits from a coach throughout the year.
Our cohort hails from different types of schools, including district, charter, private and Catholic schools. Preference is given to teachers who teach in under-resourced communities.
What is the Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship experience?
The Hollyhock Fellowship is a one-year experience, where Fellows will:
Attend our two-week Summer Seminar:
July 15 - July 26, 2024
Join four Saturday intersessions:
Oct. 19th & Dec. 7th, 2024; March 1st & May 17, 2025
Receive supportive coaching throughout the year to apply what they have learned
Build community with one another - sharing teaching resources and supporting each others’ growth
Learn more about each exciting part of the program below!
What resources does the Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship provide?
Stipend:
$3000, disbursed throughout the Fellowship
Supportive Coaching:
Video-based and in-person coaching sessions throughout the school year with expert practitioners and peers
Professional Education Credits:
75 CTLE Continuing Education Credits and an opportunity for A+/P Credits.
Materials:
Access to high quality, resources, primary documents, and professional growth opportunities throughout the school year
Summer Seminar 2024
"Overall, I am so happy with the Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship! At first, I was very hesitant about dedicating a full two weeks of my summer to work. However, I was more than rewarded with awesome speakers, solid instruction and great colleagues who became friends. 10/10 recommendation to anyone who wants to step up as a teacher!"
Our content focus for Summer 2024:
Summer Seminar Faculty
Prof. Eric Foner is the DeWitt Clinton Professor Emeritus of History at Columbia University. His work concentrates on the intersections of intellectual, political, and social history, and the history of American race relations. As a national expert, Dr. Foner will be focusing on the history of Reconstruction.
Professor Terry Anne Scott is the Director of the Institute of Common Power and an award-winning historian, author, and speaker. Dr. Scott’s research interests focus largely on African American social and cultural history, and political and social movements. She will be focusing on the history of lynching and the Great Migration.
Professor Yohuru Williams is Distinguished University Chair and Professor of History and Founding Director of the Racial Justice Initiative at the University of St. Thomas. His research interests include African American history, civil rights, Black Power movements, African-American constitutional and legal history, and social studies pedagogy. Dr. Williams will focus on Long Reconstruction and the Civil Rights Movement.
Jon and Gary are the authors of From Story to Judgement: The Four Question Method for Teaching and Learning Social Studies, a text we read for the seminar. Jon and Gary are long-time public school history teachers and they engaged us in learning how to apply this 4QM method to our own instruction.
What Fellows Are Saying:
“Loved the lecture by Dr. Foner! Getting intense content knowledge presented by such a qualified professor was excellent.”
“Professor Williams’ session really is at the heart of why I applied to be here...Equity in education is really getting clear about ways to frame complex and contentious historical content.”
“The lectures from Professor Scott both days have been both emotionally and intellectually moving. Her insights and resources have truly reframed my ability to teach hard history.”
Summer Seminar Activities
Fellows will visit renowned museums and community cultural institutions on guided tours from curators and experts, analyze and interpret the arguments of the exhibits, and explore ways to connect the cultural institution to their classrooms.
For example:
The Museum of the City of NY
The New York Historical Society
The Tenement Museum
Inside Out Tours: Slavery and the Underground Railroad in NYC
The Museum of Modern Art
“I enjoyed the trips a lot. I learned a lot about our city's history.”
“The trips were a great reminder of the African American history that is already present in the city that we can bring into our classes.”
“It has given me more in my career than any other professional development opportunity. It has given me community. Reignited my flame for teaching. Given me effective and accessible tools to incorporate into my practice, and surrounded me with loving and caring fellows and coaches.”
“I just really want to say thank you for the best professional development I've gotten in over a decade of teaching.“
“This fellowship ignited my flame and made me realize that teaching is truly an act of love and reminded me of why I became a teacher”
Absolutely! Our cohort regularly includes World History, Economics, and Government teachers. We think you will really enjoy learning content that is outside of your regular curriculum and will find connections to your area of expertise. The pedagogical methods are applicable to any social studies course.
During the School Year
“This was a transformative experience.”
“If I could give 11 out of 10, I would!“
“The support is immeasurable. I feel so validated and supported by my coach. I feel understood and celebrated.”
“The coaching comes from such a place of love — a love for both teaching and for developing teachers. My experience in coaching constantly affirmed why I decided to become a teacher in the first place.”
Information Sessions
We encourage you to attend an online information session prior to applying.
JANUARY
- Tue Jan. 9, 2024 5:30- 6:15pm
- Wed Jan. 17, 2024 6- 6:45pm
- Thu Jan. 25, 2024, 5:30-6:15pm
- Tue Jan. 30, 2024, 5- 5:45pm
FEBRUARY
- Wed Feb. 7, 2024, 5:30- 6:15pm
- Thu Feb. 15, 2024, 5:30- 6:15pm
- Tue Feb, 27, 2024, 6- 6:45 pm
MARCH
- Wed March 6, 2024, 5:30- 6:15 pm
If you can’t make an info session, you can always ask us questions via the interest form.
“Here are my reasons to recommend this program:
1) Access to resources, 2) Building connections among like-minded NYC educators, 3) Elevating the teacher profession, 4) This program can be instrumental in ensuring higher teacher retention rates across all NYC schools.”
“I could not have asked for much more. I am reinvigorated as a teacher, I have a ton of new tools in my tool belt, I have new colleagues and friends to bounce these ideas off of, and a great support system!”
Application Information
Eligibility Requirements
- Be a high school history or social studies teacher (Teachers from any curricula are welcome - including government, economics, and world history)
- Have at least three years of teaching experience.
- Maintain at least a part-time classroom teaching position at your current school site for the duration of the fellowship
- Attend the Summer Seminar
- Participate in and prepare fully for all of the school-year, coaching sessions, and Saturday workshops
- Have access to a computer that can support the technology interface
- Preference is given to teachers who teach in under-resourced communities with greater than 50% of students receiving free or reduced-price lunch.
Criteria for Selection
- A belief in equitable outcomes for all students
- A belief in personal responsibility to work for those equitable outcomes for all students
- Demonstrated growth mindset to continuously improve with openness to feedback and a willingness to practice and to be videoed while teaching.
- Investment in collaborating with a community of colleagues
- Support from school administration to participate fully during the summer seminar and school year and bring what you learned back to your school
Application Timeline
Applications open each year on December 1st and we have rolling admissions through April 5th, 2024.
- Round 1: Application due by Feb 5, acceptance by Feb 15
- Round 2: Application due March 5, acceptance by March 15
- Final Round: Application due April 5, acceptance by April 15
When and where are the Summer Seminar and the Saturday Intersessions?
In 2024, the Hollyhock Summer Seminar will be held:
-July 15th - July 19, 2023 and July 22 - July 26, 2024.
-Classes will run from 9:00 AM to 4:30 PM.
-There are no classes on the weekends.
The Saturday Intersessions will take place on:
-Oct. 19, 2024, Dec. 7, 2024, March 1, 2025, and May 17, 2025.
-They will run from 9:30 AM to 4:30 PM.
Our current plan is for all classes - both Summer Seminar and intersessions to be in-person at Relay Graduate School of Education’s campus, 25 Broadway, New York, NY 10011.
How do I contact Relay about the Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship?
To request more information, please email us at jverrilli@relay.edu and put “Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship” in the subject line.
When are the Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship applications available?
Applications open for the 2023-24 cohort on December 1, 2023.
Should I apply if I am not sure I can make a commitment to participate in all activities in summer and across the year?
We prefer that teachers only apply if they can fully commit to attending the entire two-week summer seminar, the Year-long coaching and Saturday workshops.
Is the Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship only for US History Teachers?
The content focus of the Hollyhock Fellowship (The Long Reconstruction- The African-American Experience 1865-1965) is focused on US History. But all social studies teachers (including global, government and economics teachers) are invited to apply for four reasons:
1. The Long Reconstruction period is important history for all teachers to know.
2. Our pedagogy sessions focus on broadly applicable skills and concepts such as document use, close reading, discourse, and equity which will surely be useful in your classroom.
3. Our supportive coaching will align to whatever curriculum you are teaching .
4. We know that teaching careers are fluid - you may find yourself teaching US history in the future!
What is the difference between the Stanford Hollyhock Fellowship and the Relay Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship?
The Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship is a special program hosted by the Relay Graduate School of Education for experienced humanities teachers in the New York Metro area. It is designed to focus on developing just high school history/social studies teachers. The Hollyhock Fellowship is a one-year program. The Stanford Hollyhock program is a national two-year program hosted by Stanford University’s Center to Support Excellence in Teaching for school-based teams of teachers in English, History, Math and Science. Both programs are possible because of the generous support of the Hollyhock Foundation.
Why is the eligibility only for teachers who have at least 3 years of teaching experience?
Experienced teachers need support and opportunities for growth to help them thrive in the classroom. We want to work with teachers who are still seeking to grow and improve for their students and to help them become much-needed teacher leaders in their schools.
For the 2024-25 school year, we only offer fellowships to high school teachers who teach in history/social studies.
What is a typical day like at the Hollyhock Summer Seminar?
The Institute typically runs from 9:00 am until 4:30 pm Monday through Friday with additional opportunities for socializing and community-building activities on the weekday evenings. Fellows will attend classes at the Relay Graduate School of Education Campus on 25 Broadway in lower Manhattan. We will have professional development sessions where we deep-dive into content, participate in daily intellectual discourse on relevant topics and work on practice-based pedagogy. Daily coffee, beverages, snacks and lunch will be provided each day. There will also be afternoon trips to NY’s renowned cultural institutions on certain days of the week.
Our hope is that all these experiences will build a community of teaching professionals that lasts long after the two-week summer institute ends.
What kinds of things do I need to do to prepare for the summer institute if I am accepted?
Fellows are invited to write a short biography about themselves and their school for our website. Additionally, we will send out 2 short books to read and we will ask you to read specific documents and to review others in a collection of primary source documents.
How do the continuing education units (CTE’s) I earn at Relay Hollyhock get documented?
Relay will email each Hollyhock Fellow a transcript with a record of the CTE’s earned after each summer and each school year. Fellows can use this transcript as verification of their professional learning hours from Hollyhock. Please note that these are not graduate credits as fellows are not enrolled at Relay as graduate students. Hollyhock fellows will also need to keep track of their own CTE documentation throughout the fellowship.
May I apply if I am a SPED or ESL teacher?
If you are a SPED or ESL educator who teaches history/social studies then you may apply. At this time, we do not offer separate sessions for SPED or ESL teachers.
2024-25 Hollyhock Cohort
Hollyhock Humanities Fellowship is excited to welcome these educators from NY and NJ to learn and grow together as a community. Click on each photo to see their Teaching Superpower!
Nicole Arendt
Teaching Superpower
Nicole Arendt
Sarah Baggs Eastwood
Teaching Superpower
Sarah Baggs Eastwood
Audrey Beegle
Teaching Superpower
Audrey Beegle
Amy Berman
Teaching Superpower
Amy Berman
Richard Brathwaite
Teaching Superpower
Richard Brathwaite
Waju Brown
Teaching Superpower
Waju Brown
Cosette Brown
Teaching Superpower
Cosette Brown
Nick Capicotto
Teaching Superpower
Nick Capicotto
Andrew Chirdon
Teaching Superpower
Andrew Chirdon
Nathanial Courtney
Teaching Superpower
Nathanial Courtney
Mads Coyne
Teaching Superpower
Mads Coyne
Vanette Dandridge
Teaching Superpower
Vanette Dandridge
Nyasia DiBona
Teaching Superpower
Nyasia DiBona
Alison Dorfman
Teaching Superpower
Alison Dorfman
Joe Ettore
Teaching Superpower
Joe Ettore
George Gandy
Teaching Superpower
George Gandy
Andrew Geathers
Teaching Superpower
Andrew Geathers
Robert Horowitz
Teaching Superpower
Robert Horowitz
Marion Howell
Teaching Superpower
Marion Howell
Susie Kim
Teaching Superpower
Susie Kim
Kelley Kurrelmeyer
Teaching Superpower
Kelley Kurrelmeyer
Conrad Lesnewski
Teaching Superpower
Conrad Lesnewski
Martina Madden
Teaching Superpower
Martina Madden
Ethan Manis
Teaching Superpower
Ethan Manis
Lisa Martin
Teaching Superpower
Lisa Martin
Azareal McCarthy
Teaching Superpower
Azareal McCarthy
Tykia Moore
Teaching Superpower
Tykia Moore
Nancy Ocampo
Teaching Superpower
Nancy Ocampo
Laura Pamplona
Teaching Superpower
Laura Pamplona
Thomas Payero
Teaching Superpower
Thomas Payero
Tatyana Penn
Teaching Superpower
Tatyana Penn
Nadia Ponce
Teaching Superpower
Nadia Ponce
Tiffany Reid
Teaching Superpower
Tiffany Reid
Geordana Roa
Teaching Superpower
Geordana Roa
Ayesha Sayyeda
Teaching Superpower
Ayesha Sayyeda
Matthew Silber
Teaching Superpower
Matthew Silber
Russel Skinner
Teaching Superpower
Russel Skinner
Laura Smykla
Teaching Superpower
Laura Smykla
Nick Sowa
Teaching Superpower
Nick Sowa
Nairée Taveras
Teaching Superpower
Nairée Taveras
Samantha Terry
Teaching Superpower
Samantha Terry
John Wasmund
Teaching Superpower
John Wasmund
Jordan Watson
Teaching Superpower
Jordan Watson
Erik Weese
Teaching Superpower
Erik Weese
Latoya Wilmot
Teaching Superpower
Latoya Wilmot
Ladan Ziaee
Teaching Superpower
Ladan Ziaee
Learn more
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